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458/541775702928442/760916/279530369/707209559831805661858909951619213323369/707916/279415650341/510925408209831805661442/760310/424747/818626909951949562657/714
Numbering plan areas in California (blue) and border states. Area code 626 is shown in red.

Area code 626 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for most of the San Gabriel Valley in the U.S. state of California. The numbering plan area (NPA) also comprises nearby areas in the northeastern portion of Los Angeles County, California, including Arcadia, Monrovia, El Monte, most of Pasadena and West Covina. The numbering plan area was created in an area code split of area code 818 on June 14, 1997.

History

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The service area was originally contained in numbering plan area 213, which was split to create 818 in 1983, before splitting again in 1997.

Prior to October 2021, area code 626 had telephone numbers assigned for the central office code 988. In 2020, 988 was designated nationwide as a dialing code for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, which created a conflict for exchanges that permit seven-digit dialing. This area code was therefore scheduled to transition to ten-digit dialing by October 24, 2021.[1]

Service area

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See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
Area code 626 is a telephone area code within the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) that serves the San Gabriel Valley region in eastern Los Angeles County, California.[1] It encompasses numerous cities and communities, including Pasadena, El Monte, West Covina, Alhambra, Baldwin Park, Arcadia, Rosemead, Glendora, Hacienda Heights, Covina, Azusa, Altadena, La Puente, San Gabriel, and Temple City, among others.[2] The area operates in the Pacific Time Zone and is known for its diverse suburban and urban populations, with a total estimated population of approximately 1.7 million residents (2024).[3] The area code was established on June 14, 1997, as a split from the existing 818 area code to meet growing demand for telephone numbers in the rapidly expanding San Gabriel Valley.[4] This split was part of a broader pattern of area code proliferation in Southern California, following the earlier division of the original 213 area code in 1984 to create 818, which covered the San Fernando Valley and parts of the San Gabriel Valley.[1] At its inception, 626 covered cities such as South Pasadena, Alhambra, Monterey Park, El Monte, La Puente, Covina, Glendora, Azusa, Monrovia, and Sierra Madre, relieving congestion in the parent 818 region.[5] As of 2025, area code 626 faces projected exhaustion of available prefixes by the fourth quarter of 2027, prompting the North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA) to file an application on February 20, 2025, for a new overlay area code to provide relief without requiring customers to change their numbers.[1] The proposed overlay, if approved by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), would introduce a new code alongside 626, marking the first such addition to the region since its creation.[1] This measure aims to sustain telecommunications services in one of Southern California's most populous and economically vital areas.[6]

Overview

General Description

Area code 626 is a three-digit telephone numbering code within the North American Numbering Plan (NANP), designated to serve northeastern portions of Los Angeles County in California.[1] Introduced as part of the NANP's expansion to accommodate growing telecommunications demand, it primarily supports voice, data, and other services in this densely populated suburban region.[1] It plays a key role in enabling efficient local calling and connectivity for residents and businesses in the San Gabriel Valley, a major economic and cultural hub adjacent to central Los Angeles.[1] Originally part of the broader 213 area code, 626 emerged as a split from 818 in 1997 to relieve numbering pressure, and it has operated without overlays until recent proposals for relief amid projected exhaustion by late 2027.[7][8] The California Public Utilities Commission initiated an overlay planning process in 2025 to introduce a new code atop 626, pending approval to ensure continued availability of telephone numbers.[8]

Geographic Context

Area code 626 serves the San Gabriel Valley and adjacent foothill communities entirely within Los Angeles County, California, as a distinct region east of downtown Los Angeles.[1] This area aligns closely with the natural boundaries of the valley, which is hemmed in by the San Gabriel Mountains to the north and transitions into broader plains toward the south and east.[9] As an integral component of the Greater Los Angeles metropolitan area, the 626 region exemplifies suburban and semi-urban development, characterized by a blend of residential neighborhoods, commercial hubs, and light industrial zones that support the sprawling urban ecosystem of Southern California.[10] The topography significantly influences this landscape, with the proximity to the San Gabriel Mountains—rising abruptly to elevations over 10,000 feet—creating a dramatic northern escarpment that affects local microclimates, drainage patterns, and urban expansion limits.[11] Serving an approximate population of 2 million residents as of 2025, the area spans approximately 375 square miles, accommodating a dense network of communities while preserving pockets of open space influenced by the mountainous terrain.[12] This scale underscores the region's role as a key suburban extension of Los Angeles, where foothill proximity enhances recreational access to natural features like hiking trails and reservoirs.[13]

History

Origins and Early Assignment

The region encompassing what would later become area code 626 was initially assigned telephone numbers under area code 213, one of the original North American Numbering Plan (NANP) codes established by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T) and the Bell System in 1947.[14][15] This code covered all of Southern California, including the Los Angeles metropolitan area and surrounding suburbs such as the San Gabriel Valley, as part of the initial 86 area codes designed to facilitate direct long-distance dialing across North America.[14] The Bell System, through its local operating company Pacific Telephone and Telegraph (later Pacific Bell), managed the deployment of this infrastructure, prioritizing lower-numbered codes like 213 for high-population centers based on rotary dial efficiency.[16][15] By the early 1980s, escalating demand for telephone numbers necessitated the first major reconfiguration of the 213 area code. On January 7, 1984, area code 818 was implemented as a geographic split from 213, with 213 retained for central Los Angeles and 818 assigned to the San Fernando Valley and the eastern suburbs, including the San Gabriel Valley communities that would eventually form the core of 626.[17][18] Existing numbers in the affected eastern and northern regions were migrated to the new 818 code through a mandatory ten-digit dialing transition overseen by Pacific Bell.[18] This split was a direct response to the exhaustion of available central office codes within 213, marking the first such division in Southern California since the NANP's inception.[19] The 1984 split addressed immediate shortages but could not fully accommodate the rapid population and economic expansion in suburban Los Angeles County during the 1980s and 1990s. The San Gabriel Valley, in particular, experienced substantial demographic growth, with cities like Pomona increasing by 42% (from 92,742 to 131,723 residents), El Monte by 34% (from 79,494 to 106,209), and Walnut by 133% (from 12,478 to 29,105) between the 1980 and 1990 censuses.[20] This boom, fueled by immigration, housing development, and business proliferation, heightened pressure on the 818 area's numbering resources, prompting ongoing monitoring by the CPUC in coordination with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA).[21] The CPUC's regulatory oversight ensured equitable allocation and planning, while Pacific Bell handled technical implementation to mitigate disruptions amid rising demand from emerging technologies like fax machines and early mobile services.[18][21]

1997 Split from 818

In the mid-1990s, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) and the North American Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA) initiated planning for relief of area code 818 due to projected exhaustion of available telephone numbers by 1997, driven by rapid population and telephone growth in the Los Angeles region.[22][21] A geographic split was selected over an overlay after public consultations, with the CPUC approving the plan in 1996 to divide the 818 service area, assigning the eastern portion—including the San Gabriel Valley—to a new code while retaining 818 for the San Fernando Valley.[23][18] This split was projected to extend the life of both codes, with the reduced 818 expected to last 5 to 8 years.[23] The new area code 626 was chosen from available codes and introduced on June 14, 1997, serving cities such as Pasadena, Alhambra, El Monte, and Covina.[1][5] A permissive dialing period followed, allowing callers to reach numbers in the split area using either 818 or 626 until mandatory use of the correct code began in February 1998, after which incorrect dials received recorded reminders for six months.[5] Existing telephone numbers in the affected region retained their 818 prefix, while new assignments received 626, ensuring no immediate changes for current residents but requiring updates for directories and systems.[21] Rate areas remained unchanged, preserving local calling patterns under CPUC oversight.[1] Public notification efforts included workshops and hearings organized by telecommunications carriers and the CPUC starting in 1995, with announcements in local media to educate residents on the changes.[22] Transition challenges arose, particularly in the San Gabriel Valley, where businesses expressed concerns over updating thousands of contact databases and potential customer confusion during the dual-dialing phase, leading to criticism of the split at public forums.[22][5] Despite these issues, the CPUC emphasized the split's necessity to accommodate ongoing demand without immediate overlays.[18]

Post-Split Developments

Following the creation of area code 626 in 1997, the region retained seven-digit dialing for local calls, in contrast to California overlay areas where ten-digit dialing was introduced starting in the late 1990s to manage multiple codes within the same geography.[24] This approach allowed 626 to operate as a single-code area without immediate overlay complications, preserving simpler local calling procedures amid growing demand.[25] A significant regulatory shift occurred in 2021 when mandatory ten-digit dialing was enforced across area code 626, effective October 24, to support the nationwide implementation of the 988 suicide and crisis lifeline code.[26] This change required all local calls within 626—and to adjacent non-overlay codes—to include the full area code, aligning with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) directives to reserve three-digit codes for national services and prevent dialing conflicts.[27] The North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA) has closely tracked number utilization in 626 since its inception, documenting steady increases in central office code assignments driven by residential population growth and the proliferation of technology-related businesses in the San Gabriel Valley.[28] By early 2025, CPUC reports indicated that available prefixes were projected to exhaust by late 2027, reflecting sustained demand from demographic expansion and economic development in the area, though no major splits or overlays were implemented during this period. As of December 2024, the CPUC anticipated approving an overlay by February 2026, with implementation to follow if approved.[1][29] Conservation efforts, including thousands-block number pooling introduced in the early 2000s, helped mitigate exhaustion by reallocating underutilized blocks among carriers.[7]

Service Area

Covered Cities and Communities

Area code 626 primarily serves the San Gabriel Valley in Los Angeles County, California, encompassing a range of urban and suburban locales with significant residential populations and cultural diversity. This region features a blend of historic neighborhoods, educational institutions, and commercial hubs.[1] The major cities within the 626 area code include Pasadena, which comprises most of the city and is home to about 137,000 residents (as of 2024) known for its cultural landmarks and proximity to the San Gabriel Mountains; Arcadia, serving around 54,000 people (as of 2024) in a family-oriented suburban setting; Monrovia, with approximately 38,000 inhabitants (as of 2024) and a focus on community parks and historic districts; El Monte, an urban core with over 105,000 residents (as of 2024) reflecting higher population density and diverse demographics; West Covina, accommodating roughly 107,000 individuals (as of 2024) in a commercial and residential mix; Alhambra, with about 82,000 residents (as of 2024) featuring vibrant Asian-American communities; and Baldwin Park, supporting around 70,000 people (as of 2024) in an industrial and working-class environment. These cities represent the bulk of the area code's usage, with El Monte exemplifying the denser urban pockets compared to more spread-out suburban zones.[30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37] Smaller communities covered by the 626 area code consist of Temple City, a residential area with nearly 36,000 residents (as of 2024) emphasizing quiet neighborhoods and local schools; Rosemead, home to about 50,000 people (as of 2024) with strong multicultural influences; San Gabriel, serving around 38,000 (as of 2024) in a historic mission-adjacent town; Duarte, with approximately 21,000 inhabitants (as of 2024) in a foothill community; Irwindale, a small industrial city of about 1,500 (as of 2024) focused on manufacturing; and South El Monte, accommodating roughly 20,000 residents (as of 2024) in a compact urban setting. Additional communities include Altadena, Hacienda Heights, Monterey Park, San Marino, and Sierra Madre. These locales provide essential support to the broader valley's economy and daily life.[30][38][39][40][41][42][43] Portions of additional areas fall under partial coverage, including sections of Azusa, where the area code serves specific neighborhoods within a total city population of about 48,000 (as of 2024); eastern parts of Glendora, covering suburban extensions amid 51,000 overall residents (as of 2024); and select areas of La Cañada Flintridge, reaching limited foothill zones in a community of around 20,000 (as of 2024) that primarily uses other codes. This partial inclusion highlights the nuanced boundaries of the 626 service area.[30][44][7][45][46][47]

Boundaries and Adjacent Areas

Area code 626 encompasses a defined territory primarily within the San Gabriel Valley in eastern Los Angeles County, California. Its northern boundary is marked by the Angeles National Forest and the San Gabriel Mountains, which form a natural demarcation separating it from more northerly regions served by area code 661.[1] To the south, the area extends into the Pomona Valley, approaching the Interstate 10 freeway, beyond which it interfaces with southern adjacent codes such as 562 and 657/714.[1][29] On its eastern edge, area code 626 abuts area code 909 (and its overlay 840), covering the transition from the San Gabriel Valley into the Inland Empire regions. The western and southwestern boundaries align with area codes 323 and 213 (along with their overlay 738), delineating the shift from inland valley communities to more central and urban parts of Los Angeles.[1][29] These edges reflect the historical 1997 split from area code 818, with minor exchanges in foothill transition zones potentially shared between 626 and 818 due to lingering rate center assignments.[1] Area code 626 currently operates without overlays, maintaining its standalone status across its service territory, though future relief measures are under consideration due to projected number exhaustion.[29] In standard North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA) maps, 626 is visualized as a compact inland pocket embedded within the broader expanse of greater Los Angeles County, typically shaded in red to highlight its distinct valley confines.[48]

Technical Aspects

Dialing Procedures

In the 626 area code, mandatory ten-digit dialing has been required since October 24, 2021, for all local calls, following the format area code + seven-digit number (NPA + NXX + XXXX), and 1 + 10 digits for long-distance calls.[26] This change was implemented to enable the nationwide rollout of the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, a three-digit code that could not function alongside seven-digit local dialing. As a result, seven-digit dialing was discontinued, requiring updates to automatic dialing systems such as alarm systems, medical alert devices, and elevator phones, which previously relied on abbreviated formats and now risk failed connections if not reprogrammed.[26] Local calls within the 626 area code, as well as to select exchanges in adjacent area codes 747/818 and 213/323/738, are treated as non-toll calls without additional charges, but must use the 10-digit format.[26] For instance, calls from Pasadena (626) to certain San Fernando Valley exchanges in 818 remain local, reflecting the geographic proximity and historical numbering ties in the Los Angeles region. Operator-assisted calls follow a 0 + 10-digit format. For international dialing to numbers in the 626 area code, callers use the standard North American Numbering Plan (NANP) format: the originating country's international exit code, followed by +1 (the NANP country code), the 626 area code, and the seven-digit local number. Mobile and wireless usage adheres to the same NANP conventions, with no unique prefixes or exceptions beyond standard central office code (NXX) assignments managed by the North American Numbering Plan Administration.

Number Exhaustion and Future Plans

The 626 numbering plan area (NPA) is projected to exhaust its central office (CO) codes by the fourth quarter of 2027, according to the North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA) forecasts as referenced in the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) proceedings.[29] This projection accounts for ongoing demand growth in the San Gabriel Valley region, where population and telecommunications usage continue to strain available resources.[49] To address this impending depletion, NANPA filed application A.25-02-004 with the CPUC on February 20, 2025, seeking approval for an all-services distributed overlay with a new, yet-to-be-determined area code over the existing 626 territory.[29] The proposed overlay would introduce the new code without geographic splits or boundary changes, allowing all customers to retain their current numbers while mandating ten-digit dialing for local calls—a requirement already in effect since October 2021.[29] CO codes from the new overlay NPA would only be assigned after all available 626 codes are exhausted, potentially extending the overall numbering capacity by approximately 33 years.[29] Efforts to conserve numbering resources in the 626 NPA have included thousands-block number pooling implemented since May 2002 and CO code rationing maintained until September 20, 2010, which delayed the need for relief measures.[29] Additional conservation has involved the reclamation of unused codes, with reports identifying significant inventories held by carriers; for example, a 2000 audit identified over 575,000 unused wireless numbers, many in low-contamination blocks suitable for reassignment.[7] While specific rate center consolidations in 626 since 2010 are not prominently documented, broader NANPA initiatives have supported such optimizations to reclaim idle resources across NPAs.[50] If approved by the CPUC, the overlay implementation timeline envisions a start date no later than July 1, 2026, with the new area code becoming active for assignments around 2028-2029 following 626's exhaustion.[29] A public education plan would accompany the rollout, focusing on notifications without paid advertising to inform residents and businesses of the changes.[29]

References

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